Crispin Wright
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WittgensteinEpistemology|notable_ideas = Rule-following considerations
Neo-Fregeanism{{·}} Truth pluralism|influences =
Ludwig Wittgenstein{{·}}
Gottlob FregeMichael Dummett|influenced = }}
Crispin Wright (born 1942) is a
British philosopher, who has written on neo-
Fregean philosophy of mathematics,
Wittgenstein's later
philosophy, and on issues related to
truth,
realism,
cognitivism,
skepticism,
knowledge, and
objectivity.He was born in Surrey and was educated at
Birkenhead School (1950–61) and at
Trinity College, Cambridge, graduating in Moral Sciences in 1964 and taking a PhD in 1968. He took an Oxford BPhil in 1969 and was elected Prize Fellow and then Research Fellow at
All Souls College, Oxford, where he worked until 1978. He then moved to the
University of St. Andrews, where he was appointed Professor of Logic and Metaphysics and then the first Bishop Wardlaw UniversityProfessorship in 1997. As of fall 2008, he is professor at
New York University (NYU). He has also taught at the
University of Michigan,
Oxford University,
Columbia University, and
Princeton University. Crispin Wright is founder and director of
Arché (research center), which he will leave in September 2009 to take up leadership of the new
Northern Institute of Philosophy(NIP) at the University of Aberdeen (Scotland).In the philosophy of mathematics, he is best-known for his book
Frege's Conception of Numbers as Objects (1983), where he argues that Frege's
logicist project could be revived by removing the
Principle of Unrestricted Comprehension (sometimes referred to as Basic Law V) from the
formal system.
Arithmetic is then derivable in
second-order logic from
Hume's principle. He gives informal
arguments that (i)
Hume's
principle plus second-order logic is
consistent, and (ii) from it one can produce the
Dedekind–Peano axioms. Both results were
proven informally by Gottlob Frege (
Frege's Theorem), and would later be more rigorously proven by
George Boolos and
Richard Heck. Wright is one of the major proponents of
neo-logicism, alongside his frequent collaborator
Bob Hale.In general metaphysics, his most important work is
Truth and Objectivity (Harvard University Press, 1992). He argues in this book that there need be no single, discourse-invariant thing in which
truth consists, making an analogy with
identity. There need only be some
principles regarding how the truth
predicate can be applied to a
sentence, some 'platitudes' about true sentences. Wright also argues that in some contexts, probably including
moral contexts,
superassertibility will effectively function as a truth predicate. He
defines a predicate as superassertible if and only if it is "
assertible" in some state of information and then remains so no matter how that state of information is enlarged upon or improved. Assertibility is
warrant by whatever standards inform the
discourse in question.Many of his most important papers in philosophy of language, epistemology, philosophical logic, meta-ethics, and the interpretation of Wittgenstein have been collected in two volumes published by
Harvard University Press.
Awards
External links
Crispin WrightCrispin WrightCrispin Wright
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